Author / Carolyn Thompson

May 2022

According to the MET Office, May came with a quiet and uneventful set of weather. Down here on the Lizard, it felt much better than that. I did a quick comparison with May of last year.

April 2022

Keats referred to the Bluebell, (or Wild Hyacinth), as ‘Saphire Queen of the mid-May’ but with the changing weather patterns and warmer winters it is now ‘Queen of mid-April’. The woods

March 2022

Although the first half of the month was unsettled in its weather, it had none of the drama of February. In general, the days were mild and often sunny but the nights were bitterly cold and full of

February 2020

It was a very dramatic month in terms of weather. It was the mildest February since 1884, (MET Office) but had far more rainfall than average. On the 18th the full moon lit up the sky

January 2022

The winds blew hard on New Year’s Eve and gifted us with a wild night and a roaring campfire but we woke to the warmest of days on the first of January. A flow of subtropical air had blown

December 2021

Our December was mild despite Storm Barra arriving on the first day of the month. Ireland and the North of England were hit badly with up to 6,000 homes without power, ferries cancelled,

November 2021

The weather remained mild and settled for most of the month with a visit from Storm Arwen in the last week, which devastated the North of England and Scotland but barely touched us here

October 2021

According to the trusty MET Office, the weather for this month was dreary, damp and unsettled. Here on The Lizard, we had many misty mornings which then developed into clear, bright

September 2021

Every year during the summer months of July and August, we are led to believe that this will be the best harvest ever of blackberries. We are often disappointed and many a glorious

August 2021

Yes, the waning days of July had lulled us into a false sense of security, promising delicious long days outside with heat from dawn to dusk. And then came August and the school holidays

July 2021

Climate breakdown stared us in the face this month; the full gamut of weather conditions now regularly affecting our lives with soaring temperatures one week followed by torrential rainClimate breakdown stared us in the face this month; the full

June 2021

Still the subject of weather dominates our thoughts and concerns. The temperature moved slowly towards a warmer note, but we had some very cold days for this time of year. The

May 2021

The swallows have returned. It is a delight to see and hear them heralding the promise of warmer days and the coming spring. The barns are alive with their chattering and busy with their nest

April 2021

Unfortunately, the promises of warmth offered to us at the end of March were cruelly snatched away from us in April. Heavy frosts greeted us most mornings and hung on for hours, despite

March 2021

March was warm and muggy, wet and windy, sunny and cloudy, cold and frosty. The MET Office described it as a, ‘disturbed spell of weather’. Early on the warm woolly jumpers were cast

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